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Janice Hart : ウィキペディア英語版
Janice Hart
Janice Hart (born 1955) was an unsuccessful candidate for the office of Illinois Secretary of State in 1986.
Hart, a political unknown and a LaRouche movement activist since the age of 17,〔"anice Hart proud she never went to college" Lloyd Green, Don Hayner. Chicago Sun - Times. Chicago, Ill.: Mar 20, 1986. pg. 5〕 unexpectedly won the Democratic Party's nomination.〔 Her opponent, Aurelia Pucinski, came from a politically prominent family and was supported by the party organization. On March 19, 1986, Hart celebrated her victory of the previous day, saying "I'm going to revive the spirit of Abraham Lincoln and General Patton. We're going to roll our tanks down State Street."〔
Prominent Democrats nationwide opposed Hart's candidacy, with Democratic National Committee chairman Paul Kirk saying "Good Lord, we have a problem here."〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The 1986 LaRouche Election Debacle in Illinois )〕 Democratic gubernatorial candidate Adlai Stevenson III refused to run on the same slate with Hart and the LaRouche-supported candidate for Lieutenant Governor, Mark J. Fairchild. He described Hart, who is Jewish, and Fairchild as "neo-Nazis... who preach anti-Semitism, who cavort with the Ku Klux Klan, and who want to destroy labour unions."〔(Chapter 13, Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism )〕 Instead, Stevenson formed the Solidarity Party and ran with Jane Spirgel as the Secretary of State nominee. Hart achieved 15% of the vote, with Spirgel taking 17%. Hart and Spirgel's opponent, Republican incumbent Jim Edgar, won the election by the largest margin in any statewide election in Illinois history, with 1.574 million votes (67%). Following the election Hart defiantly said, "Victory is not defined by your petty election."〔''Chicago Tribune'' November 6, 1986〕
Hart appeared in the news again in the summer of 1986 when she threw a pound of raw liver, as a symbolic "pound of flesh," at the feet of Milwaukee Archbishop Rembert Weakland, to protest what she perceived as his support for the International Monetary Fund. After initially failing to appear to answer the charges, she was fined $500 for disorderly conduct.〔
Hart opposed Pucinski again in 1987, this time for circuit court clerk, which Pucinski won. When Hart applied for the nomination for Secretary of State again in 1990 she did not qualify due to insufficient signatures on her petition. She subsequently retired from public life. In 2007, one-time running mate Fairchild told a reporter that Hart was no longer with the LaRouche movement.〔"LaRouche follower returns to Capitol; Mark Fairchild pushes for ban on home foreclosures" BERNARD SCHOENBURG. ''State Journal Register''. Springfield, Ill.: Nov 2, 2007. pg. 5〕
==Political significance==
Hart ran on the LaRouche platform, including measures to classify AIDS as a communicable disease "and give health officials the power to test and quarantine
where needed,"〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The LaRouche-Bevel Program to Save the Nation- LaRouche's Program for a War on AIDS )〕 investigation of supposed drug smuggling cartels protected by Henry Kissinger and Katharine Graham, and strong support for the Strategic Defense Initiative and nuclear power. Ever since the 1986 election the Hart candidacy has been discussed and studied by academics, and journalists. One theory is that she won the 1986 Democratic nomination over Pucinski because "()o one had heard those foreign-sounding names (and Pucinski ) ... people voted for white bread and American-sounding (i.e., WASP) names, knowing absolutely nothing about the candidates."〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Some Indications That Foreign Sounding Names Matter )〕 A similar theory is that she won because her name caused voters to connect her with then-prominent Democrat Gary Hart (of Colorado). Others blame Stevenson for his inept campaigning for the ticket and voters for their apathy. Dennis King in ''Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism'' (1989) cites evidence that some of Hart's support resulted from below-the-radar organizing and campaigning in farm communities and rust belt towns.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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